from Common import * from MiscUtils.PropertiesObject import PropertiesObject class PlugInError(Exception): pass class PlugIn(Object): """ A plug-in is a software component that is loaded by WebKit in order to provide additional WebKit functionality without necessarily having to modify WebKit's source. The most infamous plug-in is PSP (Python Server Pages) which ships with Webware. Plug-ins often provide additional servlet factories, servlet subclasses, examples and documentation. Ultimately, it is the plug-in author's choice as to what to provide and in what manner. Instances of this class represent plug-ins which are ultimately Python packages (see the Python Tutorial, 6.4: "Packages" at http://www.python.org/doc/current/tut/node8.html#SECTION008400000000000000000). A plug-in must also be a Webware component which at means that it will have a Properties.py file advertising its name, version, requirements, etc. You can ask a plug-in for its properties(). The plug-in/package must have an __init__.py while must contain a function: def InstallInWebKit(appServer): This function is invoked to take whatever actions are needed to plug the new component into WebKit. See PSP for an example. If you ask an AppServer for its plugIns(), you will get a list of instances of this class. The path of the plug-in is added to sys.path, if it's not already there. This is convenient, but we may need a more sophisticated solution in the future to avoid name collisions between plug-ins. Note that this class is hardly ever subclassed. The software in the plug-in package is what provides new functionality and there is currently no way to tell AppServer to use custom subclasses of this class on a case-by-case basis (and so far there is currently no need). Instructions for invoking: p = PlugIn(self, '../Foo') # 'self' is typically AppServer. It gets passed to InstallInWebKit() willNotLoadReason = plugIn.load() if willNotLoadReason: print ' Plug-in %s cannot be loaded because:\n %s' % (path, willNotLoadReason) return None p.install() # Note that load() and install() could raise exceptions. You should expect this. """ ## Init, load and install ## def __init__(self, appServer, path): """ Initializes the plug-in with basic information. This lightweight constructor does not access the file system. """ self._appServer = appServer self._path = path self._dir, self._name = os.path.split(path) self._ver = '(unknown)' self._examplePages = None def load(self): """ Loads the plug-in into memory, but does not yet install it. Will return None on success, otherwise a message (string) that says why the plug-in could not be loaded. """ print 'Loading plug-in: %s at %s' % (self._name, self._path) assert os.path.exists(self._path) # Grab the Properties.py self._properties = PropertiesObject(self.serverSidePath('Properties.py')) if not self._properties['willRun']: return self._properties['willNotRunReason'] # Update sys.path if not self._dir in sys.path: sys.path.append(self._dir) # Import the package self._module = __import__(self._name, globals(), [], []) # Inspect it and verify some required conventions if not hasattr(self._module, 'InstallInWebKit'): raise PlugInError, "Plug-in '%s' in '%s' has no InstallInWebKit() function." % (self._name, self._dir) # Give the module a pointer back to us setattr(self._module, 'plugIn', self) # Make a directory for it in Cache/ cacheDir = os.path.join(self._appServer.serverSidePath(), 'Cache', self._name) if not os.path.exists(cacheDir): os.mkdir(cacheDir) self.setUpExamplePages() def setUpExamplePages(self): # Add a context for the examples app = self._appServer.application() if app.hasContext('Examples'): config = self._properties.get('WebKitConfig', {}) self._examplePages = config.get('examplePages', None) if self._examplePages is not None: examplesPath = self.serverSidePath('Examples') assert os.path.exists(examplesPath), 'Plug-in %s says it has example pages, but there is no Examples/ subdir.' % self._name ctxName = self._name + 'Examples' if not app.hasContext(ctxName): app.addContext(ctxName, examplesPath) self._examplePagesContext = ctxName def hasExamplePages(self): return self._examplePages is not None def examplePagesContext(self): return self._examplePagesContext def examplePages(self): return self._examplePages def install(self): """ Installs the plug-in by invoking it's required InstallInWebKit() function. """ self._module.InstallInWebKit(self._appServer) ## Access ## def name(self): """ Returns the name of the plug-in. Example: 'Foo' """ return self._name def directory(self): """ Returns the directory in which the plug-in resides. Example: '..' """ return self._dir def path(self): """ Returns the full path of the plug-in. Example: '../Foo' """ return self._path def serverSidePath(self, path=None): if path: return os.path.normpath(os.path.join(self._path, path)) else: return self._path def module(self): """ Returns the Python module object of the plug-in. """ return self._module def properties(self): """ Returns the properties, a dictionary-like object, of the plug-in which comes from its Properties.py file. See MiscUtils.PropertiesObject.py. """ return self._properties ## Deprecated ## def version(self): """ DEPRECATED: PlugIn.version() on 1/25 in ver 0.5. Use self.properties()['versionString'] instead. @ Returns the version of the plug-in as reported in its Properties.py. Example: (0, 2, 0) """ self.deprecated(self.version) return self._properties['version']